It was a funny story actually. If it was up to producer George Martin (different from George R.R. Martin, who wrote Game of Thrones), the first release from the group, now widely heralded as the best rock and roll songwriters of all time, would have been a song they did not even write.

Martin pressured the group to release a song called “How Do You Do It?” a cover track. The Beatles insisted on a quick ditty they had written, entitled “Love Me Do.” The song, which would be considered incredibly “pop” by today's standards, was “artistic” for a 1962 recording (maybe it was the harmonica).

Though musical standards have changed significantly in the last 50 years, to this day, you cannot stream The Beatles' music on Spotify.

“We want to get them on the service, that’s the bottom line. We just need to convince them of the benefits,” Spotify spokesman Graham James tells Mashable. “We are huge fans of The Beatles. They are icons.”

The Beatles Have Traditionally Moved Slowly

It may not seem like a huge deal. A motivated Beatles fan can find The Beatles music on the Internet. After all, you can look up pretty much any song on YouTube. Plus, many people probably maintain a long list of Beatles songs on iTunes. Heck, if worst comes to worst, you could dust off the old record player and listen to the albums on vinyl. The sound quality would be much richer and warmer than a highly compressed MP3, anyway.

However, this misses the point. Streaming services, most notably Spotify, have become an extremely popular way for people to consume music. So when the group that all but invented popular music is conspicuously absent from those platforms, it is natural to wonder why.

Their original contracts date back to the 1960s, when no one envisioned the Internet, or even compact discs or videos.

“I think part of it is that The Beatles have been very cautious to move into new technologies and new music-delivering formats,” Beatles expert Bruce Spizer tells Mashable. “Their original contracts date back to the 1960s, when no one envisioned the Internet, or even compact discs or videos.”

On that note, it was a similarly long process for The Beatles to release their catalogue on CD. The first CD players hit the market in 1982, but it wasn’t until 1987 that EMI and Apple Corps, the band’s record label and management company, released the music on disc.

We Can Work It Out: Apple Corps vs. Apple

When the main delivery platform for music went digital, again The Beatles were slow on the uptake. Due to lingering litigation with Apple (the computer company), Beatles music wasn't available on iTunes until 2010.

The source of the grief between the two factions stemmed from the similarity of their company names. The Beatles formed Apple Corps, a record label and multimedia company, in the late 1960s. Apple, the computer company, formed in 1976.

“They had worked out an agreement in previous years, and the agreement basically was that the Beatles wouldn’t get into computers, and Apple computers wouldn’t get into music. But time went on, and the two began to blend together,” Spizer says. “Part of the problem was that they agreed to the initial agreements at a time when no one had contemplated these technologies.”

Here, There and Everywhere ... Except Spotify

An enormous music collection was once a bragging right. For instance, my older brother's MP3 collection would take three-quarters of a year to play from start to finish.

With the rise of streaming services such as Spotify, Rhapsody and Rdio, music delivery is changing yet again. By paying a monthly subscription fee, a music consumer can avoid buying and storing large amounts of music and eliminate the hapless struggle to maintain an organized collection when moving from device to device.

Less than $10 each month now buys instant access to millions of songs. Spotify alone has more than 15 million songs in its database. Through smartphone apps, those millions of songs are easy to transport. It seems, however, not all artists are buying into the idea.

Led Zeppelin, AC/DC and Pink Floyd still refuse Spotify. The Beatles are perhaps the most notable among these “nowhere men.”

“We’re in contact with the rights-holders,” James says. “We want to work with them to get [The Beatles] on the service.”

James could not speculate on a timeframe for getting the beloved group onto Spotify.

Perhaps the slow adaptation is not a flaw, but rather because bands with the musical clout of The Beatles, and the other aforementioned groups, don't need to rush to adopt new media. They already enjoy rampant popularity, so they have the luxury to sit back and ensure the newest media delivery methods are worthwhile and, of course, profitable.

Spizer, a longtime Beatles fan and expert, personally prefers the superior sound quality of vinyl or even Blu-ray. But he understands that convenience of access to music is an important feature as mobile media becomes increasingly popular. He says he thinks the Beatles camp understands that as well, which is why they will eventually come around.

“It’s certainly possible," he says. "I think they’re beginning to see some of the potential of new technology.”

Most bands are lucky to have one great singer. The Beatles had four. Not only could every member of the band sing, the band had a unique ability to create lush vocal harmonies. From the following video, you can learn how to sing all three parts of the song "Because," from the album Abbey Road. This song is arguably The Beatles' most impressive and complex in terms of harmonizing. The same singer recorded a video of himself singing all three parts at once, if you need to hear how it sounds before learning the individual parts. Now go find two euphonic friends, study this video for an hour, then impress all your buddies at the next party.